Subjective evaluation of an olfaction enhanced immersive virtual reality environment.
Date
2017-10Author
Egan, Darragh
Keighery, Conor
Barrett, John
Qiao, Yuansong
Timmerer, Christian
Murray, Niall
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Show full item recordAbstract
Recent1
research efforts have reported findings on user Quality of
Experience (QoE) of immersive virtual reality (VR) experiences.
Truly immersive multimedia experiences also include
multisensory components such as olfaction, tactile etc., in addition
to audiovisual stimuli. In this context, this paper reports the results
of a user QoE study of an olfaction-enhanced immersive VR
environment. The results presented compare the user QoE
between two groups (VR vs VR + Olfaction) and consider how
the addition of olfaction affected user QoE levels (considering
sense of enjoyment, immersion and discomfort). Self-reported
measures via post-test questionnaire (10 questions) only revealed
one statistically significant difference between the groups; in
terms of how users felt with respect to their senses being
stimulated. The presence of olfaction in the VR environment did
not have a statistically significant effect in terms of user levels of
enjoyment, immersion and discomfort.
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